Authorlink logo

All about publishing a book, and getting help to convert a PDF to ePub, Mobi and other e-book formats

Member Login
(My Account)
Forgot password?
Book Pitches | Writers' Registry | Agency Directory | E-Book News & Reviews | Join | About Us | Contact Us | | Search Site

FAST LINKS

Follow us!
Twitter
Facebook
Myspace
Blog
WritersEducation.com



International Thriller Writers

Discover the best thriller writers on the planet!


SSL
SSL


WARNING! PLEASE READ ABOUT THIRD PARTY ADS: Authorlink encourages writers to thoroughly investigate third-party ads on this or any other site offering free and easy publishing help. We subscribe to the highest standards of the traditional publishing industry, and do not necessarily endorse any advertiser on our site. Also, Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on our site enabling display of ads based on user visits to our site and to others on the Internet. Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy. Authorlink guidelines, #7 includes more on our own policies

[ Search for Articles ] [ Visit Our Interviews Page ]

Authorlink! Georgia Correspondent Jennifer Rampey gained these insights from Author Emily Hanlon at a recent workshop in Atlanta.

Looking Down
The Creative
Rabbit Hole

Insights from Emily Hanlon

By Jennifer Rampey
Authorlink! Georgia Correspondent

ATLANTA-- Unearthing the deep-rooted creativity and passion that inspires fictional characters requires an author to expect the unexpected. That's one pearl of wisdom author Emily Hanlon shared with writers recently at a workshop focusing on unleashing and developing characters from the imagination.

Hanlon's book, The Art of Fiction or How to Fall Down the Rabbit Hole Without Really Trying, is a course on setting this creativity free and was the centerpiece of the workshop. Hanlon encourages her students to become aware of what is happening in the unconscious mind where characters are first generated, and to be open to the unexpected nature of creativity. She teaches authors to listen for their "Inner Critic" - that inner voice that can discourage and derail the entire creative process. As defined in her book, this voice is the "commandant of our intellect and conscious self or ego, the one who stands by the door of your creative unconscious, sometimes barring the way with an automatic weapon."

"We only use a small part of our creative stock and we always have room to expand," Hanlon said. "Growing up in a society that is a very, very linear, go-getter society--makes us tend to leave our creativity t behind because it's slow. Great ideas happen spontaneously."

Other tips from Hanlon's workshop:

  • The more you use your creative muscle, the stronger it gets.
  • Imaging is important; words are vehicles for an author to tell what
  • is seen in the unconscious.
  • You don't create your characters - they create you.
  • Don't be afraid to play. Creativity is about going back and becoming a child.
  • It's important to value and validate your own creativity.
Hanlon said successful creators are passionate about their work, and they are risk takers although they don't have to be bungee jumpers.

"You don't have to be a risk-taker in the outer world to be a risk-taker in the inner world."

Creative writers who find success are technical experts at their craft, and they are comfortable with failure in that they don't view it as failing. In their minds, they have simply found a technique that doesn't work, Hanlon said.

Perhaps most importantly, successfully creative writers are different - or weird - "and like it:"

Hanlon has written eight books of fiction, including Petersburg, published by Putman's in 1988. Her workshop was cosponsored by the Georgia Writers and The International Women's Writing Guild.

(000706)

The Art of Fiction
or How to Fall Down the Rabbit Hole Without Really Trying

$39.95 + $4.95 shipping/handling

To order contact:
Labrynith Press
PO Box 536
Yorktown Heights, NY 10598
(914) 962-4432


Copyright, Authorlink!, 1997


Book Pitches | Writers' Registry | E-Book News & Reviews | Join | About Us | Contact Us | Feeds | Site Map | Search Site
Literary Agency Directory | Hook an Editor/Agent | Book Reviews | News | Online Writing Classes
Authorlink Literary Group | Articles on Writing and Publishing | Advertise | Interviews | Editorial Services

Copyright © 2012 Authorlink.com is an Authorlink.com company All rights reserved